The Drop
This Travis Scott DRUXGS graphic tee surfaced during the Cactus Jack merch wave, part of the broader Astroworld-era drops that blurred the line between concert gear and streetwear grails. The bold typographic treatment and washed black fabric gave it that festival-survivor aesthetic Travis fans chased hard. Not a sneaker, but in resell circles, Cactus Jack apparel moves like limited colorways—fast and with markup.
Resell Verdict
Currently trading around $60, with asks floating between $50-$66 depending on condition and size availability. Weekly order volume sits at 44 units, signaling steady demand without explosive hype. The trajectory is stable—this isn't mooning, but it's not bricking either. Solid flip margin if you copped retail; less attractive as a buy-to-resell play unless you're bundling or sitting on deadstock pieces. Think consistent singles, not home runs.
Fake Tells
- ▸Print quality: Legit pieces have slightly faded, vintage-look graphics—reps often look too crisp or colors bleed
- ▸Gildan tag vs. blank: Early Travis merch used varied blanks; check stitching consistency on neck labels
- ▸Fabric weight: Authentic tees feel substantial, not papery—bootlegs skimp on material thickness
Who It's For
Cactus Jack completionists and Travis fans who missed the original drop window. Perfect for casual rotation, not grail-tier collecting—wear it to shows or layer it without stressing resale preservation.
Sizing & Fit
Runs slightly oversized with a boxy cut, typical of concert merch blanks. Most go TTS for that intended loose fit.






